The OP wants to donate most of his earnings. Since charities, unlike people, don’t generally exhibit diminishing marginal utility, he should choose a career that maximizes expected earnings. So in this context mean, rather than median, returns are relevant. As Carl notes in the second post, “most venture-backed startups fail, but the average (mean) financial gain to founders is measured in millions.”
As already mentioned, don’t confuse a startup with a VC-funded startup. These are very different things with very different probabilities of success (and different expected returns).
I don’t think going purely by the expected return and ignoring the shape of the distribution is a good idea.
The posts he linked to provide some data.
The OP wants to donate most of his earnings. Since charities, unlike people, don’t generally exhibit diminishing marginal utility, he should choose a career that maximizes expected earnings. So in this context mean, rather than median, returns are relevant. As Carl notes in the second post, “most venture-backed startups fail, but the average (mean) financial gain to founders is measured in millions.”
As already mentioned, don’t confuse a startup with a VC-funded startup. These are very different things with very different probabilities of success (and different expected returns).
I don’t think going purely by the expected return and ignoring the shape of the distribution is a good idea.